Toxics Release Inventory (TRI)Official reports of amounts of released chemicals (only industrial and federal facilities) see TOXMAP for geographic information that also includes hazardous waste sites on the National Priorities List (NPL) from the Superfund
program. Really need to do the tutorial/tour also Scorecard
(below)

Toxicological Profiles the largest narrative report on 308 individual chemicals, 177 as final individual downloads, 13 being contested (8/2013), 132 being updated, each selected for hazard & frequency (8/2010)
The whole 2012 CD-ROM database can be ordered for free, upon request Subsets of the rather huge Profiles' content are available as:

Public Health Statements (PHSs, longer exerpts, taken from Chapter 1 of Toxicological Profiles)

Case Studies in Environmental Medicine: terrific, clinically narrated exposure consults. Only nine (8/2013) are currently available for CME credit. CME for 15 more is out-of-date (8/2013), with 'updates in progress')

Managing Hazardous Material Incidents (MHMI), a general textbook for pre-hospital and hospital medical management of a hazardous materials incident. A training video is available to healthcare professionals, upon email request

State / Other Governmental

3,000 hazardous substances, including those which are on the Special Health Hazard Substance List (SHHSL), especially identified as carcinogenic, mutagenic, teratogenic, corrosive, flammable, and reactive substances.

This database contains a collection of occupational limit values for hazardous substances gathered from various international sites, Canada (Québec), Switzerland, Japan, and the United States as of 2006. Limit values of more than 1,000 substances are listed.

eChemPortal, by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)

Mail Lists

Forums & Communities in Occupational &
Environmental Health

Occ-Env-Med-L (free)Founded at Duke, and now housed and managed in at University
N. Carolina , this very busy forum is a professional community of nearly
3,400 readers (clinicians and public health experts from 75+ countries). Each member receives
250-300 messages each month, including announcements of web-based news
and discussion of exposure-related human disease.ArchivesSubscribe

OEM-Announce (free)Purely a uni-directional news outlet,
this provides a means to receive announcements (new web-resources, jobs,
regulations), but no discussion. This is the non-opinion
subset of Occ-Env-Med-L, above, and is about 70-100 messages
monthly.ArchivesSubscribe

aihaih-list Amer
Indust Hygiene Assoc Industrial Hygiene (free)Managed by the Association, begun in January
2000, this group discussed IH topics with about 100 messages monthly among
1,396 enrolled participants.ArchivesSubscribe

SAFETY (free)The oldest and busiest of all Occupational
Health forums, SAFETY has 3,018 subscribers and its discussions include
850(!) messages monthly. It is run from the
University of Vermont's SIRI site (see above)ArchivesSubscribe

HS-Canada (free)HS-Canada is a means of distributing messages
to a group of individuals with interests in occupational health and safety
in a Canadian context. Although the list is intended primarily for Canadians,
anyone with an interest in Canadian occupational health and safety issues
is welcome to subscribe. Messages may be sent in English or French. DIscussions
lead to 100-120 messages monthly.ArchivesSubscribe

AfrOEM (free)Occupational safety and health (OSH) issues between African OSH professionals in Africa and those in USA as it pertains to Africa/Africans. It is aimed at professionals working in the field such as physicians, industrial/occupational hygienists, nurses etc.FounderSubscribeArchives